Covid-19 Account from Italy
(Originally posted as a reply to the PTCooler thread titled Even Backwards It's Still Pi Day )
I thought a little before writing, but after the images I saw yesterday on television of some American airports with thousands of people crushed like sardines waiting for the controls, I decided to do it.
I live in one of the two regions of northern Italy most affected by the coronavirus, about 50 km from one of the two initial outbreaks (one 100 km from Venice and the other 50 km from Milan).
In these two villages (3-4000 inhabitants) the authorities immediately decided to close everything and confine the residents to their homes for two weeks.
The results were seen because after this period there were no more infected people.
At the moment 80 percent of the deaths are of people with an average age of 80 years and 70 percent are men.
In one of the new hotbeds, Piacenza, there were 29 deaths on Friday.
A local journalist did a search to find out when there had been other peaks of deaths in the past and found that only during the Second World War had reached half (15 deaths) in a single day.
In another small village in the province of Bergamo there were 50 deaths in three weeks, while in the same period of last year there were only 8.
https://it.euronews.com/2020/03/16/coronavirus-alzano-lombardo-numero-morti-sindaco
And we are talking about the two most economically advanced regions of Italy with the best healthcare systems in the country (free for all).
In a few days the problem will explode in the south, where there are far fewer intensive care beds in hospitals.
Those who initially spoke of a slightly stronger influence only made the population underestimate the danger.
Where I live (in tne center of Veneto) they started swabbing, at random, outside supermarkets because many people are infected but asymptomatic.
People die in hospitals without being able to see their families and vice versa, and are buried without mass and only with the closest relatives.
In the province of Bergamo the local newspaper yesterday had 10 pages of obituaries while normally it is only one and, since there are no more places in the morgues, they are putting the coffins in the churches.
I'm not writing this to make terrorism, but just to tell our experience hoping that, where the virus will strike next, you can treasure it.

